Caesars Entertainment Fined $50K in Atlantic City for Regulatory Shortcomings

Caesars Entertainment Fined $50K in Atlantic City for Regulatory Shortcomings.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

Caesars Entertainment has been slapped with a $50,000 fine by the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement (DGE) for numerous and repeated regulatory infractions.

Caesars Entertainment Atlantic City casino DGE fineCaesars Atlantic City. Caesars Entertainment has agreed to pay the New Jersey Division of Gaming Enforcement $50,000 for failing to properly register casino employees as mandated under state law. (Image: AP)

The DGE regulates the nine casinos in Atlantic City. It says the penalty stems from Caesars failing to properly register and license key employees over a period spanning more than a year. DGE Director David Rebuck told the Las Vegas-based casino operator of the decision in a letter dated July 7, 2022. It said that the company s failure to obtain casino licenses for 49 employees who were required under state law to achieve such permits warrants the punishment.

Caesars self-reported initial regulatory shortcomings in May of 2021. Since then, the casino operator told the state it discovered additional employees who should have been registered with the DGE who were not.

New Jersey s Casino Control Act requires that certain casino employees become registered . The gaming regulator performs background checks and other probes of those individuals to assure that the state gaming industry remains .

Caesars operates three Atlantic City casinos Caesars, Harrah s, and Tropicana.

Surprising Shortcomings

Atlantic City casinos have been required to register key employees with the state for as long as gambling has been legal in New Jersey. And that s why it is quite unexpected that a company as experienced and as large as Caesars Entertainment was found to be uncompliant.

Caesars first notified the DGE on May 3, 2021, that it had realized seven of its information technology (IT) staffers had been on its payroll with inactive casino employee registrations. The company told the gaming agency that it would probe its other departments to assure compliance. But that review turned up dozens of additional employees who were supposed to be DGE-registered, but were not.

The DGE initially said it would not penalize Caesars since the company self-reported the regulatory infractions and resolved the matter timely. But after Caesars admitted to additional employee registration failures, Rebuck opted to act.

Caesars provided the Division with multiple reports which revealed further issues regarding the lack of necessary casino employee registrations, Rebuck explained. As of November 2021, Caesars appeared to have approximately 49 employees who were not properly credentialed due to either holding no casino employee registrations or holding inactive casino employee registrations.

Caesars told the state that some of the registration failures were because of temporary leaves of absence caused by the pandemic.

Caesars Agrees to Fine

Because Caesars Entertainment had not properly registered its casino workers, the DGE concluded that the company had also violated the state statute requiring each licensed gaming property to submit accurate monthly employee reports.

Rebuck explains that Caesars has agreed to the $50,000 fine for the regulatory inadequacies.

Caesars has agreed to pay such amount in recognition of the seriousness of its failures related to non-compliance, Rebuck concluded.

Rebuck finished by explaining that additional Caesars employees discovered to be unregistered would subject the casino company to further monetary penalties.

Article Sources
Caesars Agrees to Sell Southern Indiana Casino to Cherokees for $250 Million editorial policy.
  1. Crown Resorts Says It Can’t Pay $450M AUSTRAC Fine

Compare Accounts
×
Pittsburgh Hosts Cincinnati as Winless Teams Duel on Monday Night Football
Provider
Name
Description
Gambling Helplines Report Uptick in Calls from Users of Digital Trading Apps  Victor Wembanyama Shines After Slow Start in NBA Summer League  Leagues’ Sport Betting ‘Integrity Fee’ Would Be Illegal Under IGRA, Says Tribal Gaming Expert  Rhode Island-Based Twin River Worldwide Holdings Commits $250 Million to Buybacks, Dividends  South Korean Police Close Illegal Gambling Ring Worth More Than $90M  Coeur d’Alene Casino Reopens in Idaho to Eager Players, Safeguards in Place  Inflation Could Take Bite Out of Las Vegas Vibrancy  Ohio Sports Betting: 16 Apps, 13 Sportsbooks, and 771 Kiosks Approved for Jan. 1 Launch  Wynn Las Vegas Again Top Sin City Hotel on Travel + Leisure Rankings  Chile’s Gambling Ecosystem Under Siege Over Allegations of Fraud, Other Illegal Activity